Stuck in India due to Covid ? Know your tax liability

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Doubts regarding the residency status of those who are stuck in India during FY21 were expected to be clarified in the Budget. But the Budget was silent on the issue. The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has now come out with a circular on this. The long-awaited circular has not changed conditions for determining the residential status, but it has reiterated that the possibility of double taxation is low. If you have been stranded in India and working out of home, here’s what you need to know:

What are the existing rules applicable to determine the residential status as per the Income Tax Act?

As per the current income tax provisions, an Indian citizen or a person of Indian origin (PIO) whose Indian income does not exceed ₹15 lakh per annum becomes a resident of India if she/he stays at least 182 days in the country in a financial year. If the Indian income of such a person exceeds ₹15 lakh, she/he attains residency in India if a) stays in India for 182 days or more in a financial year, or b) stays for 120 days or more in the relevant financial year and also stays for 365 days or more in preceding four previous years.

If the person is a not a citizen of India or a PIO, then the 120 days in the second scenario above will be replaced with 60 days.

Note that these rules are applicable from FY21. The residential status rules applicable for FY20 were tweaked to provide some relief to taxpayers by excluding the period of stay in India from March 22, 2020 to March 31, 2020 for the purposes of determining the residential status if the taxpayer was not able to leave India during that period.

What are the instances wherein one may become the resident of India for the reason of being stranded in the country due to Covid-19?

There could be two main instances wherein an individual may become a resident in India in FY21 (on the back of exceptional situations) due to which income earned may become taxable both in India and abroad.

One, a person of Indian origin working abroad who acquired residence status there but temporarily returned to India because of Covid-19 situation. He may become a resident in India while retaining the residency status of the other country in which she/he is working.

Two, a non-resident visitor to India (perhaps on a holiday or to work for a few weeks) gets stranded here due to the pandemic and attains the resident status here. It is also relevant to note that even in cases wherein an individual became resident in India, he would most likely become not ordinarily resident in India and hence his foreign sourced income shall not be taxable in India unless it is derived from a business controlled in or a profession set up in India.

Does the CBDT circular provide relief on the residency conditions for FY21 to those stranded in the country?

There is no relief provided in terms of period of stay for FY21 for the purpose of residential status. The circular just states that NRIs and foreign nationals stuck in India due to Covid-19 pandemic and facing double taxation in FY21 can submit the details to the income-tax department by March 31.

The circular tries to allay the fear of double taxation — taxability both in abroad and in India – of an income. It says the possibility of double taxation doesn’t exist as per the provisions of Income Tax Act, read with the DTAA (Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement) with each country.

In spite of that, if a particular tax payer suffers from double taxation due to forced stay in India despite complying with the rules in DTAA, he/she shall provide such information online to the Income Tax Department in Form NR annexed with CBDT circular by March 31, 2021 (https://tinyurl.com/taxres21). After examining the case, the tax department decides if any relaxation is required to be given in that case.

Does it mean that you have to worry about taxes if you have worked from India in FY21 for a company incorporated outside the country ?

There is no a straight forward answer. It is possible that a person is stranded in India due to Covid-19 but continued to earn income from the employer abroad by working from home. According to Mukesh Kumar, Director at M2K Advisors, salary earned by an employee for services rendered in India is taxable in India, irrespective of whether the employee is a resident or non-resident.

However, in case of foreign citizens, remuneration received from a foreign entity is exempt if the foreign entity is not engaged in any business in India, the stay of the employee does not exceed certain number of days (say, 183 days as per the India-USA DTAA) in the financial year and such remuneration is not claimed as deduction in India. However, to claim the tax treaty benefit, the employee should obtain tax residency certificate from the other country. However, experts say that obtaining a tax certificate from other country, sometimes, could be a time-consuming and a costly affair.

So, if your income becomes taxable in India, will you get the tax credit if the taxes are already paid on that income abroad?

A resident person in India is entitled to claim credit of the taxes paid in any other country in accordance with the rule 128 of the Income Tax Rules, 1962. This can be done by submitting the withholding tax certificate from the other country or any other supporting document evidencing payment of tax in the other country along with the return of income in India in Form 67. Having said that, if the tax rates in the country in which taxes are already paid are lower than the applicable tax rates in India, the assessee will be liable to pay the balance amount.

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How to pay house rent using credit card? Know best apps to pay rent

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How to Make Rent Payment Using Credit Card?

Step 1: Register an account in an app

Step 2: Provide basic details

Step 3: Your details

The address of the residential property

Your card details, Landlord’s details, Landlord’s bank account details, Rental information- frequency, the month for which rent is paid, and payment amount

Step 4: Upload rent agreement

Step 5: Make the payment

Note: To make a payment, follow the payment flow. The bill will consist of the rent sum plus any extra fees.

If the transfer is successful, both the tenant and the landlord will receive a confirmation message.

RedGirraffe RentPay

RedGirraffe RentPay

RedGirraffe’s RentPay is a one-of-a-kind rental payment programme that accepts credit card payments. We’ve partnered with the majority of major Indian banks to make the service available to their credit card customers only. The business maintains relationships with 40 of India’s largest banks. Tenants can now arrange rent payments through their credit cards by adding RedGirraffe as a Biller/Beneficiary. Among the ‘Utility’ providers, RedGirraffe will appear as a ‘Biller.’ The tenant can pay the rent on a month-to-month basis or schedule monthly payments after they’ve been added.

A tenant must have an RG ID associated with their rental property in order to register for the service. Visit www.redgirraffe.com, click ‘RentPay,’ fill in the required information, and upload the most recent Rent Agreement. A password will be sent to the user via SMS once the form has been submitted. It charges 0.39% + GST fees, for the service.

NoBroker

NoBroker

NoBroker operates on a fixed fee model, which seems to be increasing over time. THey will set up your account after you provide your beneficiary’s bank account details. It allows all your property payments at one place – rent, maintenance, deposit, token. One of the reasons No broker has recently gained popularity is because of its partnership with Payzapp, which offers a 5% cashback up to Rs.500 when you pay rent on Nobroker with Payzapp when checking out. For all payment types, the Nobroker pay rent service charge is currently 1%, but keep in mind that this fee is also subject to adjustment at any time. Now comes the exciting part: after you’ve completed your payments, you can win cashback, loyalty points, or air miles! Depending on the bank and type of account you have, each credit/debit card is qualified for different deals.

CRED RentPay

CRED RentPay

It helps you to pay your rent with a credit card in a quick three-step procedure that is completely hassle-free. It is not only the most user-friendly app for making rent payments, but it also has a lot of other features. The service charge for Credit Card is upto 1.5% (including GST). The costs added to the rent sum when paying with CRED RentPay are known as service charges. These are the fees that payment gateways charge for transactions. CRED’s rent product currently allows you to pay up to INR 2,00,000 in rent. You will need to have a PAN card number for rent payments over INR 50,000 once again.

Housing.com Pay Rent

Housing.com Pay Rent

They’ve also recently introduced a rent payment service. For time being, Housing.com’s rent payment service only accepts Visa and MasterCard. You’ll need to create an account and fill out some basic information like your landlord’s name, account information, and rent amount. This is a one-time-only operation. You will not be asked to enter any of this information again the next time. When you pay with Housing, you’ll get offers, cashback, loyalty points, air miles, and much more. For the same, we’ve collaborated with the best brands. It could take up to 48 hours for the funds to appear in the landlord’s account. You can assert the HRA exemption by submitting your rent receipts. For all payments you’ve made, Housing produces receipts.

GoodReturns.in



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Readers’ Feedback – The Hindu BusinessLine

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This is with reference to your recent coverage of SBI Equity Hybrid Fund, published on February 6. The fund was earlier covered in the edition dated June 21, 2020, where it was assigned a 5-star rating, and more recently on February 6, 2021. However, now on checking BusinessLine Portfolio Star Track MF Ratings, I found that the fund has been assigned a 3-star rating. Request you to please resolve this anomaly on the rankings.

––Chetan Soorenji

BL Research Bureau says: Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We revised the ratings in mid-February 2021. Usually, this exercise results in ratings change for a few funds, based on how they have fared on the various parameters we consider for the ratings. However, during the revision this time around, the ratings for a few funds got misplaced due to an error in capturing the Sortino ratio from the database. As Sortino ratio carries 30 per cent weight in the ratings, this reflected in the sharp ratings change for some funds including SBI Equity Hybrid. We have corrected this error from the March 7 edition, and also put out a note on Page 11 regarding the same. SBI Equity Hybrid fund ratings stands at 5-star. Apologies for the inconvenience caused.

This is with reference to the Fund Query published on February 28. A fund named Mirae Asset Emerging Equities is referred to in it. I could not find it in BusinessLine Portfolio Star Track MF Ratings. What is the correct name? Is it an old name?

––Velmurugan

BLRB Says: The MF scheme name mentioned there is incorrect. Apologies for the error. The correct name is Mirae Asset Emerging Bluechip.

This is with reference to the article titled ‘It is imperative that women make a Will’ published on March 7. It was very well-written and published on an important day — International Women’s Day. While writing a Will, it is important to take the consent of all those involved or those who feel that they can claim the assets, into confidence. Bringing out a consensus Will will add to the weight of the Will. Does the Will need to be written on a stamped paper?

––Yerram Raju Behara

BLRB says: Thank you for writing to us. We reached out to Neha Pathak of Motilal Oswal Private Wealth management, who was interviewed in that story. She suggests that an individual does not require any permission for the Will that is written for their own assets. A Will can be written on a plain paper. One needs to ensure that the Will is signed not only by the creator of the Will but also by at least two witnesses.

This is with reference to the article titled ‘Easy Trip IPO: A lot of baggage’ published on March 7.

Very detailed analysis. Very good job by the analyst. Look forward to seeing more articles like this.

––Sundar

I have been a regular reader of BusinessLine Portfolio for years. The ‘Simply Put’ column explains various terms and concepts which are otherwise spelt by experts only. Thank you for educating readers.

––Velmurugan TS

BL Portfolio is worth reading, to build a better financial portfolio, and for those seeking knowledge on personal finance.

––MPS

The weekly edition of Portfolio helps me become aware of basic financial disciplines. It is a really worthy product for non-finance individuals.

––CA Shashikanth

The Derivatives page is nicely written. The data provided on Page 8 (Take 500) is very voluminous. If it can be broken down sector- and market-cap wise, it will be very helpful. The above-mentioned categories can be further sorted out on ROCE, weekly return, etc.

––Vijay K

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Term Insurance Plan To Get Expensive From April 1, 2021: Here’s Why

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Insurance

oi-Roshni Agarwal

|

Beginning FY22 i.e. April 1, 2021, term insurance premium rates will get dearer. This is majorly due to increasing death claims on account of Covid-19 as well as increase in reinsurance rates. And as the increase in reinsurance price comes amid the pandemic, insurers are not in the position to absorb the higher costs.

Term Insurance Plan To Get Expensive From April 1, 2021: Here's Why

Term Insurance Plan To Get Expensive From April 1, 2021: Here’s Why

In reinsurance there is involved a reinsurer who assumes part of the risk taken by the primary insurer/ insurance company or other reinsurer for premium charged to the insured. As there is seen a threat of second wave of coronavirus in regions such as South East Asia (including India), the UK and the US, reinsurers globally have increased rates.

Reinsurance rates for Indian insurers went higher even before the pandemic

Even before the world saw the lethal virus come through, insurance companies in India faced hardening in reinsurance rates. And this was as global reinsurers turned wary of the fact that the reinsurance rates in India are lower in comparison to the cost of a life cover in European nations, where the life expectancy rate is better.

Hike in premium rates only by the private life insurers and not LIC

And what is of interest is that LIC being able to negotiate better terms with reinsurance companies and commanding the largest market share in the industry will not be hiking the premium for its term plans. “Private insurers don’t have the flexibility to bring down rates with global reinsurers. LIC is able to do that and hence their premiums are not being hiked,” said the India head of a global reinsurer.

Why the term plan premium by private insurers will be increased?

For the larger risk coverage offered, the insurance companies or insurers pay reinsurance premium to the reinsurers to get partly covered or the risk component is partly shared between the primary insurer and reinsurer in simple terms. And in a scenario when reinsurers increase rates, the end purchaser of the insurance policy has to pay a higher premium price.

Nearly all of the reinsurance contracts are renewed between January 1 and April 1 in any year. In ongoing financial year itself, term plan premium rates were increased by 15-20 percent after reinsurance rates for these policies were revised.

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4 Gold ETFs To Buy After A Near 20% Fall

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Investment

oi-Sunil Fernandes

|

Gold Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are now attractively priced and some of them have dropped almost 20 per cent from peak levels. These Gold ETFs track gold prices and can be bought and sold on the stock exchanges. They are much better than buying physical gold like gold bars, coins and jewellery, where there are numerous problems from theft to locker charges to buy and sell margins, which do not make them very lucrative.

How to buy gold ETFs?

You can buy gold exchange traded funds just like you buy shares. Place an order through your broker or online (if you are trading online). They are easily available and very much liquid as well. So, if you have a demat account and trading account with a broking firm, you can buy these ETFs. Most of the gold etfs, have a performance that more or less generate similar returns and hence you can choose any of the gold etfs. Here are a few gold ETFs that you can buy.

4 Gold ETFs You Can Look At

1-year returns 3-year returns 5-year returns
Kotak Gold Fund Regular plan 1.9% 13.10% 7.75%
ICICI prudential Regular Gold Savings Fund 0.83% 12.02% 7.36%
HDFC Gold Fund 2.86% 12.31% 7.37%
Nippon India ETF Gold BEES -0.29% 12.32% 6.85%

A drop in gold prices makes these ETFs attractive

A drop in the prices of the precious metal has made some of these gold etfs very attractive. In fact, year to date some of these funds have seen a drop of almost 11 to 12 per cent in value. We would like to state that we are recommending these ETFs largely on account of a drop in gold prices. Over the longer term, equities have generated much better returns than gold ETFs.

However, gold is an excellent means of diversification and putting money solely into equities is a bad idea. There is a possibility that gold could dip a little more from these levels and hence buying systematically every month could help reduce the price risk. It’s important to remember that price remains the key while investing. Should some of the Gold ETFs rally even 3 to 5 per cent from here we would not suggest buying into the same.

4 Gold ETFs To Buy After A Near 20% Fall

Factors that have pushed gold prices in India lower

As mentioned earlier, gold prices in India have slumped nearly 20% from peak levels. The Union Budget slashed the duties on gold which pushed prices lower. Apart from this, international prices of gold have also fallen, which has left gold prices at pretty decent levels. In fact, there are worries that inflation would spike across the globe, which has led to a surge in bond yields. This in turn has led to a sharp fall in the price of gold over the last one month. Over the long term it is very difficult to predict the movement of gold.

The precious metal has rewarded investors only over the long term. Hence if you are looking at a tenure ranging from 5 to 10 years, gold could provide returns. For short term investors, equities may be a better choice.



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What’s this craze for ‘NFTs’ all about, anyway?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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LONDON – A digital art piece, tweaked using cryptocurrency technology to make it one-of-a-kind, sold at auction this week for nearly $70 million. That transaction made global headlines and buoyed already-mushrooming interest in these kinds of digital objects – known as non-fungible tokens, or NFTs – that have captured the attention of artists and collectors alike.

A NON-WHAT TOKEN?

In economics jargon, a fungible token is an asset that can be exchanged on a one-for-one basis. Think of dollars or bitcoins – each one has the exact same value and can be traded freely. A non-fungible object, by contrast, has its own distinct value, like an old house or a classic car.

Cross this notion with cryptocurrency technology known as the blockchain and you get NFTs. These are effectively digital certificates of authenticity that can be attached to digital art or, well, pretty much anything else that comes in digital form – audio files, video clips, animated stickers, this article you’re reading.

NFTs confirm an item’s ownership by recording the details on a digital ledger known as a blockchain, which is public and stored on computers across the internet, making it effectively impossible to lose or destroy.

At the moment, these tokens are white-hot in the collecting world, where they’re being used to solve a problem central to digital collectibles: how to claim ownership of something that can be easily and endlessly duplicated.

I STILL DON’T GET IT. CAN’T ANYONE JUST COPY DIGITAL STUFF OFF THE INTERNET?

Sure, anyone can download a copy of Beeple’s art from his social media feed, print it out, and hang it on the wall. Just like you can take a photo of the Mona Lisa in the Louvre or buy a print from the museum gift shop. But that doesn’t mean you own those original artworks.

One purpose of NFTs is that they can be used to trace an object’s digital provenance, allowing a select few to prove ownership. In the broader picture, it’s a way to create scarcity — albeit artificial – so that you can sell something for higher prices thanks to its scarcity.

“All the time, money and effort you spend in your digital life, you can create value for that,” said Chicago fund manager Andrew Steinwold, who started an NFT fund in 2019. “You have property rights in the physical world. Why don’t we have property rights in the digital world?”

Some NFT issuers give full copyrights to the buyer, though others do not.

SO WHAT’S A BEEPLE?

Beeple is an American digital artist based in South Carolina whose real name is Mike Winkelmann. He’s been creating digital sketches using 3D tools on a daily basis for the past 13 years. Auction house Christie’s calls his work “abstract, fantastical, grotesque or absurd.” He has 1.9 million followers on Instagram.

In December, the first extensive auction of his art brought in $3.5 million, an eye-catching amount that was surpassed by this week’s record-shattering sale of his collage “Everydays: The First 5,000 Days” for nearly $70 million, paid in a digital currency known as Ethereum.

SO WHO ELSE IS SELLING NFTs?

William Shatner of “Star Trek” fame sold 90,000 virtual trading cards last year for $1 each. Electronic musician Grimes sold $6 million worth of her digital art last month, including a video clip featuring winged cherubs floating in pastel dreamscapes that went for $389,000. Clips of NBA star LeBron James dunking are selling for as much as $225,000. Actress Lindsey Lohan sold an image of her face. You can also buy virtual land in video games and meme characters like Nyan Cat.

Digital artist Anne Spalter started out as an NFT skeptic but has now sold multiple artworks using the tokens. The latest was a video called “Dark Castles” — of mysteriously distorted castles generated by artificial intelligence technology – that sold for $2,752.

“NFTs have opened up art to a whole bunch of people who never would have gone to a gallery in New York,” said Spalter, who pioneered digital fine arts courses at Brown University and the Rhode Island School of Design in the 1990s. “They’re investors, they’re tech entrepreneurs, they’re in that world.”

BUT WHO WOULD SPEND $70 MILLION ON ONE?

Christie’s on Friday identified the buyer of Beeple’s work as the financer of a digital art fund who goes by the pseudonym Metakovan, an announcement that could fuel concerns of a bubble in the cryptocurrency art market. The buyer founded Metapurse, described as the world’s largest NFT fund, which is likely to benefit from the heightened attention.

The British auction house said the purchase makes Beeple’s piece the third-most valuable artwork ever sold by a living artist, behind works by Jeff Koons and David Hockney.

Spalter said she expects this bubble to pop, though she still believes NFTs hold promise for artists as a way to reduce fraud and misattribution of works.

“I’m still mystified by the prices and how high they are,” she said. “I think there will be a correction.”

AP technology writer Matt O’Brien contributed to this report from Providence, Rhode Island. For all of AP’s tech coverage, visit https://apnews.com/apf-technology



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Saswata Guha, Fitch Ratings, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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We are pretty mindful of the fact that a fair degree of underwriting has been done by banks over the last three to four years in certain cases quite aggressively and some of that underwriting is probably yet to see the right kind of seasoning yet, says Saswata Guha, Director & Team Head, Fitch Ratings.

The gist of your report is that the impact of pandemic going forward is likely to pose challenges for the banking sector. You have said that not only credit cost will rise but even the NPA situation would get challenging. Most of the large banks say they have adequately provided for the challenges which lie ahead. What is your hypothesis for this space right now?
The hypothesis is primarily based on the premise that not everything that is arguably stressed is getting recognised at the moment as NPL, simply because there continues to be several forbearances in place as well as the judicial stay on some of the moratorium loans.

The number is roughly about 4% odd over and above the system’s NPL ratio which is roughly around 7%. But having said that, the 4% still does not account for the incipient stress including anything that is 30-60 days overdue and that is a number that has been on the rise quarter on quarter across the banks.

But more importantly, what it does not include are the several SME loans which have been refinanced under the various easy refinance schemes under the government’s relief measures and that cumulatively means that whatever the government is guaranteeing is just about 20% of the total exposure. The total exposure of those loans is roughly about 8.5% of the total system loans and when you start adjusting all of these into the number that we have at the moment, it is quite clear that at some point, whether it is easy liquidity condition or waning of some of the forbearances, it is likely to have an impact on asset quality. Whether that will manifest in the next financial year and whether some of it will get pushed further out because of forbearance measures being extended, we do not know, but it is quite clear that whatever banks are reporting while not being outside of our expectations, also does not present the full picture.

There is a race to bottom as far as home loans are concerned. Other consumer loans are also getting quite competitive. Meanwhile, fixed deposits rates etc also are in a race to the bottom. From here on, do you see rates hardening? How much do you see the additional borrowing cost for the NBFC universe? Will the banks face the same pinch?
Funding costs will be impacted. The declining funding cost trajectory has been a huge contributor to the fact that banks have continued to do well through a time of very limited growth. At some point, we do expect the funding cost to bottom out but if you were to consider the current liquidity situation, of which funding costs are a significant function, we expect that to continue at least for some more time, at least for a large part of this particular calendar year.

Any upward movement on the rate side will put pressure on the banks but what is important here is to also understand the inclination of the banks to lend now that it is being driven by two factors. One is credit demand itself which continues to remain reasonably subdued, at least as of now. The other of course is the bank’s ability to lend and in this situation, I have to call out the state owned banks which are constrained by virtue of the capitalisation.

Both of these factors are contributing to very limited credit supply. So without the inclination of banks to go out and lend in a meaningful way, it will not put pressure on the loan to deposit ratio which would therefore mean that banks might still have some headroom even after the rates start inching up for them, to be able to maintain their funding costs at low rates.

But quite clearly, what we have seen as of now is not sustainable because at some point we expect rates starting to inch up. You have raised a fairly valid point on retail credit and we have seen a fair bit of that and continue to see banks almost getting lock, stock, barrel into that space and trying to give out retail credit as much as possible.

It is quite possible that certain parts of retail credit, especially home loans, may prove to be a little more resilient than what we had expected initially and that was back in 2020 when things were very very uncertain. But there is also a large segment of unsecured credit cards within retail which are the usual suspects which we deem as vulnerable. You could also see vulnerabilities emanating on account of loan against property, loan against shares and some spaces which NBFIs dabble in a lot more than banks.

That is one space where we would see potential pressure in future. What is challenging with retail and to an extent even SMEs is that unlike large corporates which were pretty much the epicentre of the last asset quality cycle, it is very difficult to try and square in on an individual SME or an individual retail given how granular this portfolio is.

Banks would have to look at it on a portfolio basis but we are pretty mindful of the fact that a fair degree of underwriting has been done by banks over the last three to four years in certain cases quite aggressively and some of that underwriting is probably yet to see the right kind of seasoning yet. In times to come, clearly we will see some pressure and the litmus test of that portfolio.



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S Srimathy assumes charge as executive director of Indian Overseas Bank

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She also headed the corporate credit wing & international operations at Canara Bank’s head office before becoming head of Chennai circle, said IOB.

S Srimathy has assumed charge as executive director of Chennai-based public sector lender Indian Overseas Bank (IOB). Prior to this, she was serving as chief general manager at Canara Bank. She had been deputed to Nabard as chief vigilance officer immediately before her appointment at IOB.

Srimathy joined Canara Bank as a probationary officer in November 1986. She has over 34 years of banking experience across categories of branches from rural to metro, and is well exposed to various verticals like branch operations, mid & large credits, human resources and risk management. She has worked across several locations in the country.

She headed Canara Bank’s prime corporate branch at Cuffe Parade, Mumbai, for over three years. She also headed the corporate credit wing & international operations at Canara Bank’s head office before becoming head of Chennai circle, said IOB.

She was deputed to Nabard as chief vigilance officer in July 2018. During this period, Srimathy held additional charge as chief vigilance officer at New India Assurance Company, State Bank of India and Bank of Baroda, for varying periods. Srimathy holds a postgraduate degree in commerce along with a Masters in Business Administration. She is also a certified associate of the Indian Institute of Banking & Finance (CAIIB).

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Manappuram Finance gold loan portfolio may de-grow in Q4

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Manappuram’s weighted average LTV stands at Rs 2,963 per gram or 63% of the current gold price.

The gold loan portfolio of Manappuram Finance is likely to de-grow in the fourth quarter on account of a decline in gold prices. However, the NBFC expects to achieve a growth of 20% in the current fiscal and is targeting a growth of 10-15% in the gold loan AUM during the next fiscal.

In the third quarter, the company’s gold loan AUM, which constitutes 73.1% of consolidated AUM, increased 24.43% to Rs 20,211.58 crore, from Rs 16,242.95 crore in the year-ago quarter.

The Kerala-based lender, which also operates a home loan, microfinance and commercial vehicle leasing subsidiary, expects the share of non-gold loan business to increase in the coming quarters.

VP Nandakumar, MD & CEO of Manappuram Finance, said gold prices are likely to come down further. “Many vaccines are in the pipeline and the pandemic is seen coming down. There will be a short-term impact on business due to the decline in gold prices. The gold loan portfolio will come down in Q4. Even then, we will achieve the projected growth of 15% in gold loans and a consolidated growth of 20%.”

According to him, the demand for gold loans is stable at around 10-15% despite stiff competition from banks. He said banks are likely to come under pressure on gold loans with higher loan-to-value (LTV) becoming a problem when gold prices fall.

Manappuram’s weighted average LTV stands at Rs 2,963 per gram or 63% of the current gold price. For the standalone entity, the average borrowing cost during the quarter decreased 18 bps to 8.95%. Gold loan customers stood at 26.24 lakh in Q3 – a net increase of 67,000.

Nandakumar said lending is back to normal in the microfinance, home loan, and vehicle financing subsidiary. “Coming to the microfinance business, Asirvad MFL’s AUM stands at Rs 5,358 crore, up by 7.8% QoQ. The collection efficiency from the MFI business was at 99% in December and the disbursement during the quarter was Rs 1,306 crore. We are confident that COVID impact is largely behind us and we foresee improved performance for Asirvad in the coming quarters.”

Nandakumar said the NBFC had approached the RBI a year back for sanction to start an insurance company, but there has been no response so far.

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BFSI stock slips; Nifty and Sensex closes lower too, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The benchmark index Sensex fell over 600 points in intraday trade while Nifty touched 14,969 on the downside. Bank and financial stocks such as ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and SBI were among the top laggards in the 30-share pack Sensex.

At close, the Sensex was down 0.95% at 50,792.08, while Nifty was down 0.95% at 15,031. Nifty PSU Bank Index fell 1 percent dragged by the Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Indian Bank. BSE Bankex also ended lower at 39,995 losing 1.28%.

Nifty Bank Index ended at 34,496 down -1.23%. Amongst the top Losers were- ICICI Bank at Rs 612 ending below -2.04% followed by SBI at Rs 381 with -1.70%, Induslnd Bank at Rs 1,022 (-1.65%), Kotak Mahindra Bank at Rs 1,935 (-1.47%), Axis Bank at Rs 750 (-1.33%). While all the major indices traded in red, RBL Bank and IDFC First Bank managed to stay in the green.

Nifty Financial Services ended at 16,506 Lower by -1.10%. Amongst the biggest losers were Indiabulls Hsg Rs 224 by -2.67% followed by Cholamandalam at Rs 531 (-1.41%), HDFC at Rs 2,568 (-1.22%), Bajaj Finserv at Rs 9,934 (-0.57%).

Other key takeaways

RBI to conduct OMO for sale and purchase of govt securities
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on March 10 announced it will purchase and sell Government of India dated securities for Rs 10,000 crore each via an open market operation (OMO) on March 18.

“The Reserve Bank has decided to conduct simultaneous purchase and sale of Government securities under open market operations (OMO) for an aggregate amount of Rs 10,000 crore each on March 18, 2021,” the central bank said.

Suryoday Small Finance Bank to launch IPO on March 17
Suryoday Small Finance Bank will open its initial public offering of 1,90,93,070 equity shares on March 17 with a price band of Rs 303-305 per share. The issue will close on March 19.

The anchor book subscription (if any) will open for a day on March 16. The offer consists of a fresh issue of 81.50 lakh equity shares and an offer for sale of 1,09,43,070 equity shares by existing shareholders.

Rupee Updates
Indian rupee erased some of the intraday gains but ended higher by 13 paise at 72.81 per dollar, amid selling saw in the domestic equity market. It opened 25 paise higher at 72.66 per dollar against Wednesday’s close of 72.91 and traded in the range of 72.62-72.85.

On March 10, the domestic unit ended flat at 72.91 per dollar versus the previous close of 72.93. On Thursday the currency market was shut on account of Mahashivratri.

Wall Street closes on higher mark
The S&P 500 and the Dow closed at all-time highs on Thursday as worries about rising inflation subsided, while a bigger-than-expected fall in weekly jobless claims and the signing of a massive stimulus bill reinforced expectations of a strong economic recovery.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 188.57 points, or 0.58%, to 32,485.59, the S&P 500 gained 40.53 points, or 1.04%, to 3,939.34 and the Nasdaq Composite added 329.84 points, or 2.52%, to 13,398.67



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